NBC News correspondent dies of blood clot

? NBC News correspondent David Bloom, one of the network’s most prominent young stars and a near constant television presence reporting from the Iraqi desert, died Sunday from an apparent blood clot, the network said.

The 39-year-old co-anchor of the weekend “Today” show was about 25 miles south of Baghdad and packing gear early in the morning when he suddenly collapsed.

He never regained consciousness and was pronounced dead from a pulmonary embolism after being airlifted to a nearby field medical unit, said Allison Gollust, a spokeswoman for NBC News. She said his death was not combat-related.

Bloom was the second American journalist to die while covering the war. Michael Kelly, editor-at-large for The Atlantic Monthly and a columnist for The Washington Post, was killed Thursday night along with a U.S. soldier when their Humvee plunged into a canal.

Both Bloom and Kelly were traveling with the U.S. Army’s 3rd Infantry Division.

NBC News had built a special vehicle, dubbed the “Bloom-mobile,” to send strikingly clear pictures of him riding atop a tank through the Iraqi desert. He reported memorably on the sandstorms that briefly delayed American forces.

“He was both a genuinely nice guy and an incredibly tenacious reporter,” NBC News President Neal Shapiro said. “He wouldn’t be beaten on a story. He always kept us in the game.”

From the Iraqi desert, Bloom reported on what the American forces were doing militarily, but he also took the time to convey what their lives were like there, including the meals that they were eating and what it was like trying to work in the middle of a sand storm.

“He was a rising star here,” Shapiro said.

Bloom, a native of Edina, Minn., lived in the New York area with his wife, Melanie, and three daughters. After attending Pitzer College in Claremont, Calif., Bloom started his career as a local government reporter for WKBT-TV in La Crosse, Wis. He worked in Wichita and Florida before joining NBC News in Chicago in 1993 and moving to Los Angeles in 1995.

In Wichita, Bloom worked as a reporter at KWCH, handling a variety of stories as a general assignment reporter from 1988-89.

He became a White House correspondent for NBC in 1997, during the Clinton administration. He reported on presidential races, the O.J. Simpson trial, the Washington-area sniper shooting and the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

Shaken NBC colleagues, including “Today” co-anchor Soledad O’Brien, paid tribute on the network’s broadcasts Sunday. “It’s a hard morning for all of us,” Katie Couric said.

Bloom, who had no apparent health problems, was indefatigable during the Gulf War. He reported at all hours for NBC News broadcasts, and also for the cable outlets MSNBC and CNBC.

“Given the fact that we’re filing at all hours of the day and night, you try to pace yourself and get a little sleep,” Bloom told the Post. “You’re sleeping with your knees propped up around you.”

That may have been a risk factor: blood clots frequently form in legs when they’ve been immobilized and travel through the body, said Dr. Harold Palevsky, chief of pulmonary critical care with the University of Pennsylvania health system.

Dehydration can also be a factor. Palevsky said Army medics, trained and equipped to stop bleeding, may have been less prepared in the desert for a pulmonary embolism.